Crow v. Crow

103 A. 739, 41 R.I. 258, 1918 R.I. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 31, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 103 A. 739 (Crow v. Crow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crow v. Crow, 103 A. 739, 41 R.I. 258, 1918 R.I. LEXIS 37 (R.I. 1918).

Opinion

Baker, J.

Louis F. Crow on November 7, 1917, filed in the Superior Court a petition for divorce from the bond of marriage then existing between him and the respondent Josephine M. Crow. Due service of the citation issued thereon was made upon the respondent in the city of New York on November 9, 1917. On December 5, 1917 she entered her appearance by counsel and on the same day filed a motion that she be granted a divorce from the bed and board of, and from future cohabitation with the petitioner. On January 4, 1918, the petitioner duly filed a discontinuance of his original petition, and on January 9, a motion to dismiss respondent’s motion for a divorce from bed, board and future cohabitation on the alleged ground that the respondent when her said motion was filed, was not then or at any time thereafter a domiciled inhabitant of this State, but during all of said period was a resident and domiciled inhabitant of said city of New York. At the hearing on January 11, on this motion of the petitioner the above-stated allegations of fact were admitted to be correct, and thereupon the Superior Court upon consideration granted petitioner’s motion to dismiss on the ground of lack of jurisdiction to consider the case. To this action the respondent excepted, and is now duly before this court pressing that exception.

The only question presented is this: In this State can a non-resident respondent in a divorce suit maintain a motion *259 in the nature of a cross-petition praying for divorce from bed, board and future cohabitation?

The answer to this question is to be determined by the statutes regulating the matter. For in this country all divorce jurisdiction is statutory, and no court can grant a divorce except for parties for whom the statute makes provision. Section-8 of Chapter 247 of the General Laws after stating that the causes for which by law a divorce from the bond of matrimony may be decreed may also authorize a divorce from bed, board and future cohabitation contains this proviso, namely: “Provided, the petitioner shall be a domiciled inhabitant of this state and shall have resided in this state such length of time as to the court in its discretion shall seem to warrant the exercise of the powers in this section conferred.”

In Walker v. Walker 32 R. I. 28, the court considered this proviso. In that case the petitioner signed and swore to her petition for a divorce from bed, board and future cohabitation on October 16, 1909. For about a year and a half prior thereto the petitioner, her husband and their children had lived together m Newport. The domicile and residence of the husband was in Washington, D. C. The petitioner did not leave her husband until October 19 and did not attempt to gain a residence separate and apart from him until that day. A motion to dismiss her petition was granted by the Superior Court. When the case came to this court it said on page 34, “It is clear that the Superior Court was without jurisdiction in the premises, and therefore had no alternative other than to grant the respondent's motion to dismiss the petition. We do not mean to imply or to be understood as saying that in a proper case, one of urgent necessity, a wife could not become a domiciled inhabitant of this State by residing therein, separate and apart from her husband, one day or even a fractional part thereof, for the purpose of becoming a petitioner for divorce from bed and board under the statute aforesaid. What we do say *260 is that the acquirement of residence or domicile must precede the preferment of the petition.”

• We assume that the respondent would concede that by virtue of the foregoing interpretation of said proviso the Superior Court would have no jurisdiction to consider an original petition for divorce from bed and board filed by her.

. Her claim, as urged, is that inasmuch as she was brought into court upon the petition of her husband so that the court acquired jurisdiction of them both she is in a position to obtain affirmative relief, notwithstanding the fact that since she entered her appearance and made her motion for a limited divorce, he has discontinued his petition. She bases her claim upon Section 13 of Chapter 289 of the General Laws, which is as follows: “No cross-bill shall be necessary in any suit in equity, and no cross-petition in divorce proceedings, but the respondent in any such suit or proceeding may avail himself of any matter which would be open to him upon a cross-bill or petition, by setting up such matter in his answer, or in divorce proceedings by motion in writing setting forth the grounds therefor; and the court, upon hearing the cause, may make any decree for or against either party, interlocutory or final, warranted by the merits of the cause, that it could make in such suit or proceeding had a cross-bill or cross-petition been filed therein.”

In 1894 in Valk v. Valk, 18 R. I. 639, the court considered and interpreted that section (then Section 17 of Chapter 20 of the Judiciary Act of 1893). In that case the husband filed a petition for divorce and the wife, who was not a domiciled inhabitant of the State, “having filed an answer in the nature of a cross-bill under the provisions” of said Section 17, objected to a discontinuance of her husband's petition on the ground that she was entitled to be heard thereon. On page 640 the court said: “The evident purpose of this statute, in so far as it relates to proceedings in divorce cases, is to enable the respondent therein to obtain the same relief upon -his answer as he would be entitled to on a cross-petition, and no other. As the respondent admits that she *261 is not a domiciled inhabitant of this State, however, it is clear that she could not file a cross-petition for divorce. See Pub. Stat. R. I. cap. 167, § 15, and, hence, that the court is without jurisdiction to grant her affirmative relief upon her answer.”

Said Section 15 was as follows: “Sec. 15. Said court shall have no cognizance of or jurisdiction over any petition” (for divorce) . . . “unless the petitioner shall at the time of preferring such petition, be a domiciled inhabitant of this state and have resided therein for the period of one year next before the preferring of such petition.” No distinction is here made between a petition for divorce from the, bond of matrimony and one for divorce from bed and board. The section applies to both. In other words the jurisdiction of the court in relation to divorces remained the same as stated by Ames, C. J., in the case of Ditson v. Ditson, 4 R. I. 87. As the Chief Justice was then also the court reporter, he undoubtedly wrote the syllabus to this case, t'he first paragraph of which is, “By the statute law of Rhode Island, the jurisdiction of its courts in divorces, whether a menso et thoro or a vinculo, depends solely upon the residence in the state or citizenship of the petitioner.” The effect of the decision in the Valk case, supra is that under the law as it then was, domiciliary residence for a year in order to give jurisdiction for affirmative relief in divorce was as essential in a cross-petitioner as in the original petitioner, ■ and that one filing an answer or motion was in the same situation as to jurisdiction and affirmative relief as a cross-petitioner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 A. 739, 41 R.I. 258, 1918 R.I. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crow-v-crow-ri-1918.